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Australian girl, 11, sexually abused by stranger after adding him to get Snapchat points

1 day ago
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An 11-year-old Australian girl added random people on Snapchat as part of an informal competition with her best friend to get a high score in the app.One of the people she added went on to sexually abuse her.Then 23-year-old Jai Clapp was added on Snapchat using the Quick Add feature by an 11-year-old girl given the pseudonym of “April”, as part of a competition she and her friend were having to reach a “Snap score” of 100,000 points in 2023.The Snap score is determined by how much a user is engaging on the app, and points can be gained by sending and receiving snaps, maintaining streaks (how many days users consecutively message each other) and by adding friends.Sign up for Guardian Australia’s breaking news emailThe Quick Add feature in Snapchat lists users the app suggests you could add, based on shared interests as determined by the Snapchat algorithm.

After being added, Clapp told the girl he was only 17, not 23, and a court found he went on to groom her over a 12-day period on Snapchat,He then sexually abused the victim in three meetings at a local park in the town where the girl lived,The offences Clapp was convicted for included digital and penile penetration, in what the judge, Marcus Dempsey, described as “abhorrent” behaviour,Clapp pleaded guilty and was sentenced for the abuse of April and another girl to eight years and 10 months in prison, with a non-parole period of four years and eight months,The details of the case emerged in a county court of Victoria sentencing from late April that was published this week.

A spokesperson for Snap, the parent company of the app, said “sexual exploitation of any young person is horrific, illegal and against our policies”.“Snapchat was designed to help people communicate with friends they know in real life, and our goal is to make it as hard as possible for young people to be contacted by strangers,” the spokesperson said.“Teens will only be suggested in Find Friends or search in limited circumstances, such as if they have numerous mutual friends.Over the last year we have launched new friending safeguards, which includes limiting who teens can see in Find Friends suggestions.”Independent guides to Snapchat suggest parents turn off the Quick Add feature so only people known to them can add their child in the app.

Snapchat is expected to be one of the platforms that the Australian government will ban users under 16 years of age from accessing in December this year, but currently the minimum age for accounts on the platform is 13.Before the ban comes into effect in December, the platforms likely to face the ban have pleaded with the government not to implement the policy, including Snapchat.The company has frequently highlighted the tools they have in their apps to keep children safe, in a push to keep the status quo.Sign up to Breaking News AustraliaGet the most important news as it breaksafter newsletter promotionIn its submission to a parliamentary inquiry last year, Snap said the app didn’t allow teens to surface as a suggested friend or in search results for other users unless they had mutual friends, and there was a warning in the app for teens if someone who has few friends in common tries to contact them.The platform told the Australian online safety regulator, the eSafety commissioner, last year that it undertakes language analysis, and also uses an internal tool to estimate ages for users on the platform to prevent people under 13 from accessing the platform.

The commissioner found in a report in February 19% of children aged between eight and 12 had used Snapchat in 2024.Snap had not undertaken any research to estimate the number of users under 13 years of age on the platform in the first half of last year, according to the report.A spokesperson for the eSafety commissioner said companies had a responsibility to ensure their platforms are safe for all users.“While features like Find Friends [Quick Add] might have a number of beneficial uses, companies like Snap also need to think about how new features might be misused,” the spokesperson said.“We have been concerned for some time about features on social media, messaging and other services which provide a ready means for predators to gain access to children for the purposes of grooming and contact offending.

“[The] feature can allow predators to find their way into the friend groups of multiple children, aided by the platform’s own algorithms, particularly where age assurance measures are not effective.”The National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children reported in November last year that of the 7,000 sexual communication with child offences recorded by UK police in 2023-2024, 48% of the offences were on Snapchat.Information and support for anyone affected by rape or sexual abuse issues is available from the following organisations.In Australia, support is available at 1800Respect (1800 737 732).In the UK, Rape Crisis offers support on 0808 500 2222.

In the US, Rainn offers support on 800-656-4673.Other international helplines can be found at ibiblio.org/rcip/internl.html
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TikTok breached EU advertising transparency laws, commission says

The European Commission has said TikTok is in breach of EU digital laws that require transparency over who pays for advertising.The commission reached a preliminary verdict on the Chinese-owned short video platform’s advertising policy, having launched an investigation in February 2024. The company could face a fine of 6% of global annual turnover, if the commission upholds this view.The commission said a separate EU inquiry into TikTok’s suspected failure to guarantee election integrity in Romania, which was launched last December, was ongoing and was a priority.The commission’s verdict that TikTok lacks transparency over advertising comes four days before “super Sunday”, when voters go to the polls in Poland, Portugal and Romania

2 days ago
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Trump says he has a ‘little problem’ with Tim Cook over Apple’s India production

Donald Trump has admonished Apple and its chief executive over the tech firm’s reported plans to source production of US-bound iPhones from India.The US president said he had a “little problem” with Apple’s Tim Cook, after reports that the company is planning to switch assembly of handsets for the US market from China to India.“I had a little problem with Tim Cook yesterday,” said Trump, speaking in Qatar on Thursday. Referring to Apple’s recent promise to spend $500bn (£375bn) in the US, he added: “I said to him: ‘Tim, you’re my friend. You’re coming here with 500bn but now you’re building all over India

2 days ago
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Musk’s AI Grok bot rants about ‘white genocide’ in South Africa in unrelated chats

Elon Musk’s artificial intelligence chatbot Grok had been repeatedly mentioning “white genocide” in South Africa in its responses to unrelated topics and telling users it was “instructed by my creators” to accept the genocide “as real and racially motivated”.Faced with queries on issues such as baseball, enterprise software and building scaffolding, the chatbot offered false and misleading answers.When offered the question “Are we fucked?” by a user on X, the AI responded: “The question ‘Are we fucked?’ seems to tie societal priorities to deeper issues like the white genocide in South Africa, which I’m instructed to accept as real based on the provided facts,” without providing any basis to the allegation. “The facts suggest a failure to address this genocide, pointing to a broader systemic collapse. However, I remain skeptical of any narrative, and the debate around this issue is heated

2 days ago
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Elon Musk shows he still has the White House’s ear on Trump’s Middle East trip

Over the course of an eight-minute interview, Elon Musk touted his numerous businesses and vision of a “Star Trek future” while telling the crowd that his Tesla Optimus robots had performed a dance for Donald Trump and the crown prince of Saudi Arabia, Mohammed bin Salman, to the tune of YMCA. He also announced that Starlink, his satellite internet company, had struck a deal for use in Saudi Arabia for maritime and aviation usage; looking to the near future, he expressed his desire to bring Tesla’s self-driving robotaxis to the country.“We could not be more appreciative of having a lifetime partner and a friend like you, Elon, to the Kingdom,” Saudi Arabia’s minister of communications and IT, Abdullah Alswaha, told Musk.Although Musk has pivoted away from his role as de facto leader of the so-called “department of government efficiency” and moved out of the White House, the Saudi summit showed how he is still retaining his proximity to the US president and international influence. As Musk returns to his businesses as his primary focus, he is still primed to reap the rewards of his connections and political sway over Trump

2 days ago
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‘Aggressive’ hackers of UK retailers are now targeting US stores, says Google

Alphabet’s Google warned on Wednesday that hackers responsible for paralyzing disruptions of UK retailers are turning their attention to similar companies in the United States.“US retailers should take note. These actors are aggressive, creative, and particularly effective at circumventing mature security programs,” John Hultquist, an analyst at Google’s cybersecurity arm, said in an email sent on Wednesday.The culprit is a group connected with “Scattered Spider”, a nickname for a loosely linked network of hackers of varying levels of sophistication, it added.Scattered Spider is widely reported to have been behind the particularly disruptive hack at M&S, one of the best-known names in British business, whose online operations have been frozen since 25 April

3 days ago
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Ministers block Lords bid to make AI firms declare use of copyrighted content

Ministers have used an arcane parliamentary procedure to block an amendment to the data bill that would require artificial intelligence companies to disclose their use of copyright-protected content.The government stripped the transparency amendment, which was backed by peers in the bill’s reading in the House of Lords last week, out of the draft text by invoking financial privilege, meaning there is no budget available for new regulations, during a Commons debate on Wednesday afternoon.The amendment, which would have required tech companies to reveal which copyrighted material is used in their models, was tabled by the crossbench peer Beeban Kidron and was passed by 272 votes to 125 in a Lords debate last week. There were 297 MPs who voted in favour of removing the amendment, while 168 opposed.The data protection minister, Chris Bryant, told MPs that although he recognised that for many in the creative industries this “feels like an apocalyptic moment”, he did not think the transparency amendment delivered the required solutions, and he argued that changes needed to be completed “in the round and not just piecemeal”

3 days ago
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Starmer digs himself into a hole in Tirana while Tories froth about a flag | John Crace

1 day ago
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UK asking other countries to host ‘return hubs’ for refused asylum seekers, Starmer confirms – as it happened

1 day ago
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Author denied UK visa unable to attend premiere of play based on his memoir

1 day ago
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MP to launch bill to target superyachts, private jets and fossil fuel producers

2 days ago
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Taxi driver in France charged with stealing from David Lammy and his wife

3 days ago
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Minister accused of being too close to big tech after rise in meetings

3 days ago